The destiny of youngest convicted prisoner,
Tal Al Mallouhi, still vague after 4 years of detention and two months of court
verdict to be freed.
A security source assured that Al
Malouhi was taken as a ‘hostage’ by State Security Branch 258 in Damascus from
Adra Prison months ago.
The administration of the ‘Damascus
Central Prison’ demanded the officials of Branch 258 to give back Al Mallouhi,
the source said. But no hope yet as Syria’s intelligence is most powerful body
in Syria, source added.
Activists said, Assad regime will
not freed most famous young activist in order not make her a national heroine
as Syrian and International Human Rights Watchdogs have always demanded her
freedom.
Last October, first Criminal Court
in Homs ordered to release immediately al-Mallouhi, 22-year-old, after 48
months of imprisonment, according to the Lawyer Omar Qandaqji.
Syrian authorities released 40 women
detainees as part of a hostage exchange of two Turkish pilots and number
of Shiite Lebanese pilgrims last October.
Al-Mallouhi was detained on
December 27, 2009, after being summoned by State Security Branch 279 in
Damascus for questioning about her blog entries. Two days after her detention,
Syrian state security officials raided her family home and confiscated her
computer, notebooks, and other personal documents and belongings.
Al-Mallouhi was held incommunicado
at an undisclosed location without charge or access to her family for nine
months, until late August 2010, when her detention was publicized.
Al-Mallouhi’s family originally sought her release through diplomatic relations
and negotiations and therefore did not want any publicity on the case. However,
on September 2, 2010, her mother published an open letter to the Syrian
president seeking information on her daughter’s welfare and calling for her
immediate release. In the letter, her mother described the intense suffering
felt by the entire family at her daughter’s detention without any confirmed
cause. Her family was finally allowed to visit her for the first time at Doma
Prison in Damascus on September 30, 2010, but has not been permitted to visit
her since.
Tens of thousands of people are
being held by the Syrian regime, many of them without trial, activists say.
Rights groups say torture and ill-treatment are systematic in Syria's jails.
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.